It was many years ago now that my Filipino supervisor said to me ‘it’s important they see hope in all of this’.
He was referring to the Filipino artesanal fishers that we were to invite to a workshop on how addressing the fact that it often costs the fishers more to go fishing than to stay at home. Fishing is not very profitable in the now sparsely populated coastal waters of northern Luzon, especially if you’re sticking to the legal handlines and traps rather than the illegal cyanide and dynamite.
Very soon after, another colleague took a photo of the fish we had been served for dinner, with his wedding ring as a reference point. Yes, the fish were increasingly small, and the incomes of the usually poorly educated fishers, even smaller. Words like intractable and insurmountable came far more easily to mind than hope and encouragement.
But Perry’s words have often come back to me, and I think they apply as much to the fishers as it does to the countless development, disaster and research practitioners who are looking to improve the depressing trajectories that confront us every time we string a time series graph together. If we can’t hope, if our clients, participants and patients can’t hope, what will we have left? Philip Prett calls hope – substantial hope – ‘cognitive resolve’, and Braihwaite, Courville and Piper talk about the “bootstrapping that takes place between hope,
empowerment, ideas for change, and action”, writing “hope is the most enduring of these,
lying in wait through cycles of adversity and resistance to change.”
Time to plot out a framework of the enabling role of hope in sustainability.
<<Thanks to a timely suggestion from our resident super star Lorrae Van Kerkoff, I have been delving into the hope literature inspired by work of Val Braithwaite and colleagues. See the special issue of The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 2004; 592; 6 – the quotes are from Val Braithwaite’s preface “collective hope”.>>
Special saludo to Ines of Lisbon, who wants to join our community of practice through her work on sustainability and migration. Welcome Ines!



Thank you
A little bit of “portuguese hope” to you all, have a nice work and keep writing! As soon as I get the oportunity, I’ll try to write you “an entire post” talking about human ecology in this part of our world*